Electron acceptor compositions on polymer templates

ABSTRACT

Stable electron acceptor compositions are composed of a plurality of pillared metal complexes disposed on a supporting substrate. At least one Group VIII metal at zero valence is entrapped within this matrix. The complexes comprise from one to about 100 units of the formula: 
     
       
         —(Y 1 O 3 —Z—Y 2 O 3 )Me Y — 
       
     
     Y 1  and Y 2  being phosphorus or arsenic; Z being a divalent group which reversibly forms a stable reduced form and contains two conjugated cationic centers having a negative E° red  value; and Me Y  being a divalent, trivalent, or tetravalent metal of Group III, IVA, or IVB having an atomic number of at least 21 or a lanthanide with bonded anions. The units are bound to the substrate through an organic polymer having side chains derivatized with phosphonate or arsonate groups. Counter anions balance the charge of Z. The compositions can be used in the decomposition of water to yield hydrogen gas, the sensing of oxygen, and as catalysts.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This is divisional application of Ser. No. 08/517,095, filed Aug. 21, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,906,842, which was a CIP of Ser. No. 08/109,968, filed Aug. 23, 1993, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,341,838.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention pertains to stable electron acceptor compositions which have efficient and sustained photoinduced charge separation states.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Solar energy can be used and stored by the efficient production of long-lived photo-induced charge separation—a state achieved in photosynthetic systems by the formation of a long-lived radical pair. A number of artificial systems have been reported that efficiently undergo photochemical charge transfer, unfortunately, the thermal back electron transfer often proceeds at an appreciable rate, limiting the utility of these systems. What is needed is a systems which has very efficient photoinduced charge transfer, and forms a charge-separated state which is long lived in air. The charge separation in these systems typically involves a redox reaction between a photo excited donor and a suitable acceptor, resulting in the production of radical ion pairs illustrated by the formula:

D+hv→D*  (1a)

D*+A→A⁻+D⁺  (1b)

D⁺+A⁻→D+A  (2)

The cation and anion generated in this way are better oxidants and reductants, respectively, than either of the neutral ground-state molecules. To harvest the light put into this system, the oxidizing and reducing power of the photo-generated species must be used before the electrons are transferred back (equation 2) generating the starting materials. It is desirable to control this photochemically unproductive thermal fast back electron transfer reaction. One method has been to incorporate the donors and acceptors into solid matrices.

The individual components in the charge separated state have the appropriate potentials to carry out the reduction and oxidation of water. Unfortunately, these direct reactions are kinetically limited, such that catalysts are required to overcome the kinetic barriers. Colloidal platinum particles are ideal catalysts for the reduction of water to give H₂. In systems used for photoreduction of water, the close contact of high potential radicals formed in the compounds and Pt particles is advantageous, because electron transfer from reduced viologen to Pt particles should compete effectively with back electron transfer. These platinum particles may be present in the reaction solution, incorporated into the structure of the compositions, or both.

Compounds which can carry out reduction reactions, using hydrogen gas as their reducing equivalents, are useful as catalysts for the conversion of mixtures of hydrogen and oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. Hydrogen peroxide is a very large volume chemical. The United States annual production is greater than 500 million lbs. Several processes have been patented for the production of hydrogen peroxide, which depend on the two following reactions. The goal is to promote reaction (3) and retard reaction (4):

H₂+O₂→H₂O₂  (3)

H₂O₂+H₂→2H₂O  (4)

A number of catalysts for this conversion have been reported including both homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts.

The compositions of the present invention are capable of producing a sustained photoinduced charge separation state which renders the compositions useful in solar energy conversion and storage. In addition, the compositions permit reduction of various metal ions to produce the zero-valence metal in colloidal form entrapped in the matrices of the compositions. These latter matrices containing the zero-valence metal have a variety of uses such as in the decomposition of water to yield hydrogen gas and the sensing of oxygen. In addition, the zero-valence metal matrices can be used in catalysis, as for example in the production of hydrogen peroxide and the oligomerization of methane to form higher hydrocarbons.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides multi-layered compositions having a plurality of parallel “pillars” comprising divalent electron acceptor moieties with a phosphonate or arsenate at each end. Each layer of parallel pillars is separated by a layer of a group (IVA), (IVB), (IIIA) or (IIIB) metal or a lanthanide.

The complex can further comprise particles of at least one Group VIII metal at zero valence entrapped within each layer of the complex. The complexes can also incorporate “stalactites” and “stalagmites” of capped arsonato or phosphonato ligands interspersed with the pillars providing a series of interstices about each electron accepting group.

The complexes are useful for the conversion and storage of solar energy and as catalysts for reduction reactions, for example, the production of hydrogen peroxide from oxygen and hydrogen gases, the production of H₂ gas from water, and the reduction of ketones to form alcohols.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of the highly ordered structure of a substrate and film according to the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic view of a solid composition incorporating “stalactite” and “stalagmite” ligands according to the present invention.

FIG. 3. is a schematic view of a solid of the present invention incorporating metal particles and “stalactite” and “stalagmite” ligands according to the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

In general the invention relates to layered compositions comprising two or more adjacent metal layers, independently of the other, comprised of atoms of a divalent, trivalent, or tetravalent metal of Group III, IVA, IVB having an atomic number of at least 21 or atoms of a lanthanide, which form a cohesive layer. The metal layers are adjacently spaced and in substantially parallel relation to each other and to the substrate. Disposed between, and in substantially perpendicular relation to the metal layers, are organic pillars which are independently, one from the other, covalently joined to two of the adjacent metal layers and thus forming interstices between the pillars and the two adjacent metal layers. This layered composition can take the form of, for example, a thin film or a micro-crystalline solid.

The organic pillars are illustrated by the formula:

—(Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃)—  I.

each of Y¹ and Y², independently of the other, is phosphorous or arsenic;

Z is an electron accepting divalent group containing two conjugated cationic centers which together have a negative E°_(red) value, wherein Z is capable of alternating between a stable reduced form and a stable oxidized form;

A sufficient number of anions are bound to the metal ions which make up the metal layers, such that the metal ions have an effective valence of from ⁺1 to ⁺6, preferably ⁺3 or ⁺4.

A separate group of anions is present within the lattice formed by the pillars and metal atoms to counterbalance any residual charge in the composition.

Additionally, the composition can comprise particles of at least one Group VIII metal at zero valance trapped in the interstices between the pillars and the adjacent metal layers. These particles may enhance the function of the composition, for example, by acting as a catalyst for reduction reactions. The compositions can also comprise organic ligands disposed between the metal layers and between the pillars which are independently, one from the other, covalently joined to one of the metal layers. The ligands are illustrated by the formula:

—Y³O₃—R³  II.

Y³ is phosphorous or arsenic; and,

R³ is a non-reducible capping group.

In a first embodiment, the invention relates to a composite composition in which a film is disposed on a supporting substrate. In that form, the layer closest to the substrate is bound to the substrate by a linking means. The substrate can be, for example metals, glass, silicas, polymers, semiconductors (e.g., silicon, gallium arsenide), combinations thereof such as a gold layer on an aluminum base, and the like. The substrate can be in any form, for example sheets, foils, plates, films, electrodes, colloidal particles in suspension, polymer templates, high surface area supports, and the like. The film is composed of a plurality of pillared metal complexes, each of the formula:

—L−[(Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃)Me^(Y)]_(k).k*p(X^(q−))  III.

in which:

L is a linking means;

each of Y¹ and Y², independently of the other, is phosphorus or arsenic;

Z is a divalent group which reversibly forms a stable reduced form and contains two conjugated cationic centers which together have a negative E°_(red) value;

X is anion;

Me^(Y) is Me¹ _(n)W_(m), where

Me¹ is a divalent, trivalent, or tetravalent metal of Group III, IVA, or IVB having an atomic number of at least 21 or a lanthanide;

W is an anion, such as, but not limited to, halides or pseudohalides, or —OH;

n is 1, 2, or 3;

m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4;

k has a value of from 1 to about 100;

p has a value of 0, 1, 2, or 3; and

q is the charge on the anion,

where for each additional k value, another layer is added to the film.

Me¹ can be, for example, a group IVA metal having an atomic number of at least 21 such as germanium, tin, or lead, a group IVB metal such as titanium, zirconium, or hafnium, a group IIIA metal having an atomic number of at least 21 such as gallium, indium, or thallium, a group IIIB metal such as scandium, yttrium, or a lanthanide as for example lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, etc. Of these, titanium, zirconium, hafnium, germanium, tin, and lead are preferred with zirconium being particularly useful.

Each of Y¹ and Y² is phosphorus or arsenic, preferably phosphorus, each of Y¹O₃ and Y²O₃ thus being a phosphonato or arsenato group.

The group Z is divalent, being bound to the phosphorus or arsenic atom of the phosphonato or arsonato group defined by Y¹O₃ and Y²O₃. In practice, the precise structure of the group Z is of lesser importance than its electronic properties. Firstly, it must containing two conjugated cationic centers which together have a negative E°_(red) value; i.e., a reduction potential below that of hydrogen. Secondly, Z must be capable of existing both in a stable reduced form and reversibly in an oxidized form.

The two conjugated cationic centers can be for example tetravalent nitrogen atoms which are conjugated ring members in an aromatic ring system. In one embodiment, each tetravalent nitrogen atom is a ring member in a separate aromatic ring system and two such ring systems, which can be of the same or different structure, are joined to one another directly through a covalent bond. Each such aromatic ring system can be a monocycle such as pyridine, pyrazine, or pyrimidine. Alternatively, each aromatic ring system can be a fused polycycle in which a pyridine, pyrazine, or pyrimidine ring is fused to one or more benzo or naphtho ring system, as for example quinolinium, isoquninolinium, phenanthridine, acridine, benz[h]isoquinoline, and the like.

The two aromatic ring systems, which can be of the same or different structure, alternatively can be linked through a divalent conjugated system as for example diazo (—N═N—), imino (—CH═N—), vinylene, buta-1,3-diene-1,4-diyl, phenylene, biphenylene, and the like.

In a further embodiment, the two conjugated cationic centers can be in a single aromatic system such as phenanthroline, 1,10-diazaanthrene, and phenazine.

Typical dicationic structures suitable as Z thus include 2,2-bipyridinium, 3,3-bipyridinium, 4,4-bipyridinium, 2,2-bipyrazinium, 4,4-biquinolinium, 4,4-biisoquninolinium, 4-[2-(4-pyridinium)vinyl]pyridinium, and 4-[4-(4-pyridinium)phenyl]pyridinium.

The aromatic systems in which the two conjugated cationic centers are located can be unsubstituted or substituted, as for example with alkyl of 1 to 6 carbon atoms or alkoxy of 1 to 6 carbon atoms. Such substitution can be inert or can have an effect on the reduction potentials of the cationic centers sterically or through induction.

While the two cationic centers must be linked through conjugation, the entire system comprised by Z need not be conjugated. Thus Z can be joined to each of Y¹O₃ and Y²O₃ through a conjugated or non-conjugated bridge. Hence one highly desirable structure for Z is characterized by the structure:

—(R¹)_(n)—Z′—(R²)_(m)—  IV.

in which Z′ is a divalent aromatic group containing at least two conjugated tetravalent nitrogen atoms; each of n and m, independently of the other, has a value of 0 or 1; and each of R¹ and R², independently of the other, is a divalent aliphatic or aromatic hydrocarbon group. Typically each of n and m will be 1 and each of R¹ and R², independently of the other, will be a straight or branched divalent alkane chain of six or less carbon atoms, as for example methylene, ethano, trimethylene, propane-1,2-diyl, 2-methylpropan-1,2-diyl, butane-1,2-diyl, butane-1,3-diyl, tetramethylene, and the like.

The group X is an anionic group one or more of which (depending on the value of k and the charge of X) will balance the cationic charges of Z. and result in a net positive valence of Me^(Y) being equal to (4-p*q). The precise nature of X is relatively unimportant and X can be for example a halogen anion such as chloride, bromide, iodide, a pseudohalide, sulfate, sulfonate, nitrate, carbonate, carboxylate, etc.

The group W is an anionic group one or more of which (depending on the metal ion, Me¹, used) will result in a net positive valence of Me^(Y) being equal to (4-(p*q)). The precise nature of W is relatively unimportant and W can be for example a halide, a pseudohalide, hydroxy, etc.

Each complex depicted by Formula III is bound to the substrate through the depicted linking means; the plurality of —L—Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃Me^(Y) units on the substrate, thereby produces a pillared structure. Each complex can contain one Z-containing unit (“pillar”), in which case k has a value of 1, but preferably k has a value in excess of 1 so that the unit —(Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃)Me^(Y)—becomes the monomer of the pillared polymeric complex in which k ranges from 2 to about 100, typically from about 5 to about 50. This multilayered structure can be illustrated by the formula:

Such films can be prepared through sequential adsorption reactions analogously to those described by Rong et al., Coordination Chemistry Reviews, 97, 237 (1990). The synthetic method and stoichiometry used can effect and determine the resulting configuration and morphology of the compositions.

One preparation method begins with a substrate, which typically is hydroxy terminated, as for example metals (the surfaces of which invariably include the metal oxide), glass, silicas, gallium arsenide, and the like, which is first derivatized with a hydroxy-reactive reagent which introduces the linking means L or components of that linking means. Typically the distal portion of L will terminate in, and thus eventually be bound to Y¹O₃ through, a metal atom Me³ which is similar to Me¹, i.e., a divalent, trivalent, or tetravalent metal of Group III, IVA, or IVB having an atomic number of at least 21, or a lanthanide.

Thus for example, the substrate can be treated with a compound of the formula:

X″—R¹—Z——Y³O₃H₂.2X′  VI.

in which R¹ and Z are as herein defined; Y³ is phosphorus or arsenic; X′ is an anion analogous to X (X′ can be, but need not necessarily be, the same anion as will appear in the final complex) and X″ is a reactive halogen such as chloro or bromo. Thereby produced is the intermediate:

substrate—O—R¹—Z—Y³O₃H₂.2X′  VII.

The foregoing reactions can be conducted in two stages, first by treating the substrate with a compound of the formula X″—R¹—Z.2X′ and then treating the product with a phosphoryl halide such as phosphoryl chloride or phosphoryl bromide or a corresponding arsonyl halide.

In either aspect of this embodiment, the linking means produced is similar to the repeating unit insofar as it contains —Z—Y³O₃.

Alternatively, the linking means can be dissimilar to the repeating unit. Thus the substrate can be treated a silane such as an aminoalkyltrialkoxysilane as for example 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane and this derivatized substrate then treated with a phosphoryl halide such as phosphoryl chloride or phosphoryl bromide or a corresponding arsonyl halide to produce:

substrate-O-alkyl-Y³O₃H₂.  VIII.

Other examples of linking means include:

substrate-alkyl-NH—Y³O₃H₂  IX.

substrate-alkyl-O—Y³O₃H₂  X.

Another embodiment uses a template of an organic polymer as a linking means for binding the compositions/films to the surfaces of hydrophobic substrates (e.g., quartz, silicon and metals). These polymer templates are derivatized with phosphonate or arsonate groups, for example, by treating epoxide groups pendant to the polymer backbone with phosphoric acid to yield pendant phosphates.

The hydrophobic polymer template is adsorbed at the surface of the hydrophobic substrate leaving the hydrophilic phosphonate/arsonate groups free for cross-linking. These pendant phosphonate or arsonate groups are cross-linked with ions of the divalent, trivalent, or tetravalent metal of Group III, IVA, IVB having an atomic number of at least 21 or of a lanthanide which form a first metal layer. These polymer templates show good adhesion to the substrate surface, and a yield a highly porous structure (especially on metal substrates).

The polymer can be any polymer having side chains which are capable of being derivatized with phosphonate or arsonate groups. A preferred polymer is polyvinylpyridine in which a fraction, preferably less than one half, of the pyridyl groups have been alkylated with X(CH₂)_(n)PO₃H₂, where X is an anion and where n can be 1 to 16, preferably 2 to 4, (abbreviated PVP—C_(n)P). A polymer backbone which has pendent thiol groups, is preferred for enhanced binding to Au, Ag, and Pt substrates.

In another embodiment, the substrate can be the polymer template itself. Films grown on the polymer template are grown in solution. The hydrophobic properties of the polymer backbone cause the polymer in solution to aggregate into sheet form, with the pendant hydrophillic phosphonate or arsonate groups extending out into the solution, resembling lipid bilayers. This structure can be illustrated by the formula:

Colloidal particles of a Group VIII metal, preferably platinum, can be present in the solution. The hydrophobic properties of the aggregate of the polymer backbone attracts the particles. The particles are then trapped within the hydrophobic environment between polymer backbones. This structure can be illustrated by the formula:

In either case, the substrate, having a surface rich in phosphonate or arsonate groups then is treated with a reagent providing Me³ ions, e.g., zirconyl chloride. The metal ions bind to, and effectively cross-link, the phosphonate or arsonate groups, in turn producing an intermediate having a metal rich surface and characterized as “substrate—L′—Me³” in which L′—Me³ corresponds to linking means, L, of Formula III, providing a means which (I) on the one hand binds to the substrate and (ii) on the other presents a metal Me³ for further complexing.

Formation of Layers

The substrate-L is then separated from the reagent providing Me³ ions, washed with water, and treated with a solution of a bisphosphonic acid or bisarsonic acid of the formula:

H₂Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃H₂.2X′  XIII

in which Y¹, Y², Z, and X′ are as defined above. This reaction is complete within a few hours, as for example about 4 to 5 hours, and can be accelerated through the use of moderate heat, as for example from about 80 to about 100° C. The deposition of this layer can be readily monitored spectrophotometrically at wavelengths of from about 260 to about 285 nm. For consistency, generally the range of 280-285 nm is employed. One of the —Y¹O₃H₂ and —Y²O₃H₂ groups binds to the metal rich surface, while the other remains uncoordinated, thereby now producing an intermediate having a surface rich in phosphonate or arsonate groups. This intermediate can be depicted as:

substrate-L′—Me³—Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃H₂.2X′  XIV.

The substrate-L′—Me³—Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃H₂.2X′ is removed from the solution of the bisphosphonic acid or bisarsonic acid, rinsed thoroughly, and then treated with a reagent providing Me¹ ions to produce a complex of Formula III in which k is 1.

The foregoing sequence of the last two synthetic steps, that is treatment with a bisphosphonic acid or bisarsonic acid followed by treatment with a reagent providing Me¹ ions, is repeated to produce complexes having higher k values. Absorbance, as for example at 280-285 nm, appears to increase linearly with the number of layers and provides a convenient method of monitoring the formation of multilaminar compositions.

The foregoing procedure is readily and preferably modified to entrap atoms of at least one Group VIII metal, as for example platinum, palladium, iron, cobalt, nickel, ruthenium, rhodium, osmium, or iridium, at zero valence within the complexes. Thus following treatment with a bisphosphonic acid or bisarsonic acid but before treatment with a reagent providing Me¹ ions, the sample is immersed in an aqueous solution of a soluble anionic salt of the Group VIII metal. After a short time, the metal anion exchanges with some of the chloride anions in the sample. The stoichiometrics of this exchange will depend upon the respective valences of the two anions. The platinum tetrachloride and platinum hexachloride anions, for example, each have a valence of −2 and if chloride were the starting anion, one anion of either of these metal anions would exchange for two chloride anions.

Following this exchange, treatment with a reagent providing Me¹ ions then is performed as described above. As above, these reactions are repeated until the desired k value is attained. The composite is then simply exposed to hydrogen gas which reduces the metal anion to produce the metal in a zero valence state and colloidal form within the matrix of the composite. As noted previously, such materials are highly effective as catalysts in the production of hydrogen peroxide, the oligomerization of methane to form higher hydrocarbons, the decomposition of water to yield hydrogen gas, and the sensing of oxygen. The compositions also can be utilized to reduce various organic substrates.

When growing the layered compounds on a polymer template as the substrate, the above processes are generally followed, however, the sequential treatment steps are separated by dialysis steps to remove unused reactants, not by rinsing.

It is possible to utilize more than one Group VIII metal in any sample, either using soluble salts of different Group VIII metals in one or more exchanges or conducting one or more exchanges with a first Group VIII metal and subsequent exchanges with a different Group VIII metal. Thus created upon eventual reduction are unique compositions in which colloidal particles of two Group VIII metal having different chemical and electronic properties are entrapped in a single matrix.

One preferred embodiment of these layered metal phosphonate compounds, where Z is a viologen, was found to be very efficient at collecting solar radiation and converting that into stored chemical energy. The active wavelengths for this process are in the ultraviolet portion of the spectrum. The energy storage reaction is evidenced by a deep blue color developing in the solid, which persists for long periods of time in the air. This blue color is due to a reduced viologen compound. Reduced viologen reacts rapidly with oxygen when prepared in solution, but is not reactive in the solid because it is trapped inside the dense solid. Oxygen and other external agents are unable to gain access to the reactive interior layers of the solid.

In order to make it possible to utilize the stored chemical energy in these compounds, a second embodiment comprises a more open structure. The advantage of the open structures is that they will allow external reagents to have ready access to the photo-generated chemical energy. These solids are composed of a mixture of the pillars of the first embodiment further comprising other smaller ligands interspersed among the pillars. These smaller components leave open space in this new solid (see FIG. 4). A wide range of different smaller components having different properties and sizes can be used to prepare these solids, leading to a very diverse family of solids. The general formula for the materials of this second embodiment is: $\begin{matrix} {\left\lbrack {\left\lbrack {{\left( {{Y^{1}O_{3}} - Z - {Y^{2}O_{3}}} \right) \cdot k}*{p\left( X^{q -} \right)}} \right\rbrack_{1 - n}\left( {Y^{3}O_{3}R^{3}} \right)_{2n}{Me}^{Y}} \right\rbrack.} & {XV} \end{matrix}$

wherein

each of Y¹, Y², Z, X, Me^(Y), p, and q, are as defined above:

Y³ is phosphorus or arsenic;

n has a value of from 0.1 to 0.8; and

R³ is a nonreducible capping group.

In contrast to the materials of the first embodiment which are preferably produced as films on a substrate, the materials of the second embodiment are preferably produced as crystalline or amorphous solids. Analogously to the films of the first embodiment, however, zero valence Group VIII metals can be incorporated in these matrices.

As is apparent from Formula XV, two distinct ligands complex the metals Me¹ and Me². The first of these is analogous to that utilized in Formula III, namely Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃, and each such ligand is capable of complexing with two metal atoms. The second ligand, Y³O₃R³, is capable of complexing with only one metal atom. Thus the overall structure may be viewed as a series of parallel layers of the metals Me¹ and Me² with the Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃ groups serving as pillars. Extending from the metal layers between these pillars are the Y³O₃R³ groups, forming as it were a series of “stalactites” and “stalagmites” between the pillars. The resultant structure thus has a series of interstices about each —Z— group. The dimensions of these interstices and the hydrophobicity of their defining surfaces can be controlled through selection of R³. Thus one can select relatively small R³ groups such as methyl, creating larger interstices, or relatively larger R³ groups such as phenyl or benzyl, thereby producing relatively smaller interstices. Similarly, one can impart hydrophobic properties to the defining surfaces of the interstices by employing a hydrocarbon group such as propyl for R³ or alternatively decrease the hydrophobicity by employing an R³ group which is substituted with a hydrophilic group such as carboxy. Examples of suitable R³ groups include, but are not limited to: H, CH₃, CH₂Cl, CH₂CH₃, CH₂CH₂CH₃, OH, O⁻, and OCH₃.

Because of these interstices, it is possible to introduce Group VIII metals after formation of the complexes, rather than after each step, and then reduce these to zero valence as described above. Hence a complex of Formula XV is treated with an aqueous solution of a soluble anionic salt of a Group VIII metal and the resulting composition treated with hydrogen to produce the Group VIII metal in colloidal form. These compositions can be used as catalysts as previously described.

Moreover, these interstices permit the passage of various molecules into the complexes. For example, oxygen can enter into the matrices and then oxidize the —Z— groups. Since the reduced form of the —Z— group are colored while the oxidized form is white or yellow, this phenomenon can be used to detect oxygen at extremely low levels.

In addition, the ability to control the dimensions of the interstices permits the use of these materials in effecting selective reactions. For example, it is possible to selectively reduce acetophenone in a mixture of acetophenone and 3,5-di-tert. butylacetophenone if the dimensions of the interstices are selected to permit passage of the former molecule but not the latter, more bulky, molecule.

The complexes are readily prepared by treating a mixture of R³Y³O₃H₂ and H₂Y¹O₃—Z—Y²O₃H₂ in the desired molar ratio with a source of metal ions. The reaction can be conducted either by refluxing or hydrothermally and the products are readily isolated and purified.

These porous solids show no photochemical activity in the air due to the ready diffusion of oxygen into the interior of the solid. If the porous solids are irradiated with ultraviolet light under anaerobic conditions the same active species, i.e., reduced electron acceptor, observed for the dense solid is formed. Interestingly, the photochemical efficiency of these open solids is much greater than the dense materials. If the porous solids which were irradiated under anaerobic conditions are treated with air, they are rapidly bleached. Oxygen can freely diffuse into the solids and react with the photo-generated reduced electron acceptor. The product of the reaction between the reduced electron acceptor and oxygen is hydrogen peroxide. One could thus use these materials as catalysts for photochemical production of hydrogen peroxide.

It would be desirable to extract the photochemically stored energy by generating mobile high energy chemical species that could diffuse out of the solid. The goal is to incorporate colloidal metal particles into the preferred viologen containing solids. These metals are well known to act as catalysts for the reaction of reduced viologen with water to produce hydrogen gas. Experiments successfully showed that the materials of the second embodiment could be used to convert solar energy into chemical energy in the form of hydrogen gas. The process involved: 1) photo-generation of reduced viologen, 2) electron transfer from reduced viologen to the colloidal metal particle, 3) protonation of the metal particle and 4) elimination of hydrogen gas. Being a true catalyst these materials will accelerate both forward and reverse reactions equally, thus if of “metallized” material is treated with hydrogen some amount of reduced viologen is generated. On this basis these materials can be used as reducing agents. Photochemical energy is not needed to produce reduced viologen: hydrogen can be used to achieve the same result. The process for this chemical generation of reduced viologen is thus: 1) addition of hydrogen to the metal particle, 2) electron transfer from the metal particle to the viologen molecule forming reduced viologen, and 3) deprotonation of the metal colloid. Experiments have shown that the viologen molecules of these materials can be quantitatively reduced with hydrogen gas at atmospheric pressure.

A schematic drawing of these porous solids is shown in FIG. 5.

The following examples will serve to further typify the nature of the invention but should not be construed as a limitation on the scope thereof which is defined solely by the appended claims.

EXAMPLE 1

Diethyl 2-bromoethylphosphonate (25 g) and 4,4′ bipyridine (7.35 g) in 125 mLs of water are refluxed for three days. An equal volume of concentrated hydrochloric acid is added and reflux continued for several hours. The solution is concentrated to 120 mLs by atmospheric distillation and 550 mL of isopropanol are added dropwise with stirring while chilling the mixture in an ice bath. The solid which forms is collected by vacuum filtration and washed with cold isopropanol to yield 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dichloride. (¹H NMR (D₂O) 9.1(d), 8.5(d), 4.2(m), 2.0(m) ppm; ¹³C NMR(D₂O) 151, 147, 128, 58, 30 ppm; ³¹P NMR(D₂O) 17.8 (s) ppm; IR (KBr) 3112, 3014, 1640, 1555, 1506, 1443, 1358, 1281, 1175, 1112, 1020, 936, 816, 485 cm⁻1.)

In a similar fashion, utilizing 2,2-bipyridinium, 3,3-bipyridinium, 2,2-bipyrazinium, 4,4-biquinolinium, 4,4-biisoquninolinium, 4-[2-(4-pyridinium)vinyl]pyridinium, and 4-[4-(4-pyridinium)phenyl]pyridinium, there are respectively obtained 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-2,2-bipyridinium dichloride, 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-3,3-bipyridinium dichloride, 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-2,2-bipyrazinium dichloride, 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4-biquinolinium dichloride, 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4-biisoquninolinium dichloride, 1-phosphonoethyl-4-[2-(1-phosphonoethyl-4-pyridinium)vinyl]pyridinium dichloride, and 1-phosphonoethyl-4-[4-(1-phosphonoethyl-4-pyridinium)phenyl]pyridinium dichloride.

Other cationic species, such as the corresponding dibromides or disulfates are obtained by substituting the corresponding acids, such as concentrated hydrobromic acid or sulfuric acid, for hydrochloric acid in the procedure of this example.

EXAMPLE 2

Planar substrates of fused silica (9×25 mm) are cleaned in a 1:3 solution of 30% hydrogen peroxide and conc. sulfuric acid, dried at 200° C. for one hour, and then treated with a refluxing solution of 2% (v/v) 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane in 50 mL of octane for 20 minutes.

The substrates are rinsed with octane and acetonitrile and treated for 12 hours at room temperature with a solution of 10 mM each of phosphoryl chloride and 2,6-lutidine in aceto-nitrile. After rinsing in water, the substrates are treated with a 65 mM solution of zirconyl chloride for three hours at room temperature.

The foregoing procedure can be used to prepare multilayer films on other substrates such as silicon wafers and vapor deposited gold films.

The substrate next is subjected sequentially to the following two steps.

A). After removal of the solution of zirconyl chloride, the samples are thoroughly rinsed with deionized water and treated with 6 mM of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dichloride at 80° C. for 4 hours and then thoroughly rinsed with deionized water. (Absorption is measured at 284 nm after treatment, the measured extinction coefficient for 4,4′-bisphosphonate being 24,000 M⁻¹ cm⁻¹ at 265 nm.)

B). The samples next are treated with a 65 mM zirconyl chloride solution at room temperature for one hour and again thoroughly rinsed with deionized water.

Upon completion of one cycle of steps A and B, a plurality of a metal complex of Formula III in which k is 1 is obtained on the planar silica supporting substrate. Each repetition of steps A and B increases the value of k by one. The number of layers, and thus the number of cycles, correlates to absorbance at 284 nm, as can be seen from the following:

No. of Layers Absorbance  0 0.057  1 0.083  2 0.091  3 0.109  4 0.130  5 0.152  6 0.177  7 0.201  8 0.217  9 0.242 10 0.263 11 0.281 12 0.299 13 0.327 14 0.341 15 0.357 16 0.367 17 0.373 18 0.383 19 0.407 20 0.423 21 0.452 22 0.458

EXAMPLE 3

By substituting 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dibromide in the procedure of Example 2, a series of multilaminar compositions are obtained having the following absorbances:

No. of Layers Absorbance  1 0.083  2 0.098  3 0.113  3 0.157  5 0.182  6 0.239  7 0.286  8 0.350  9 0.353 10 0.391 11 0.465 12 0.557

EXAMPLE 4

High quality films also are obtained by employing other metals in place of zirconium in step B, e.g., hafnium, titanium, tin, gallium, etc, as shown in the following procedure.

Planar fused silica substrates (9×25 mm) are cleaned as described in Example 2 and a layer of 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane is deposited thereon from the gas phase using the method of Haller, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 100, 8050 (1978). The substrates are phosphorylated as described in example 2, rinsed, and treated with 10 mL of a 65 mM aqueous solution of hafnyl chloride for three hours at room temperature.

Alternating treatments with (A) an aqueous solution containing 6 mM 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dibromide and 20 mM sodium chloride at 80° C. for 4 hours and (B) a 65 mM aqueous solution hafnyl chloride at room temperature for 1 hour, with thorough rinsing with deionized water after each, then produce a series of multilaminar compositions which can be characterized spectrophotometrically at 284 nm.

No. of Layers Absorbance  1 0.052  2 0.086  4 0.175  6 0.250  8 0.304 10 0.384 12 0.518

EXAMPLE 5

The procedure of Example 2 is modified after one or more executions of step A but before execution of the corresponding step B by immersing the samples in a 6 mM aqueous solution of dipotassium platinum tetrachloride for 0.5 hour thereby exchanging one platinum tetrachloride anion for two chloride anions. Step B then is performed as described in Example 2.

After completing the final cycle of steps A and B, the composite is suspended in water and hydrogen gas is bubbled through the mixture for two hours. The platinum is reduced to a zero valance colloidal state entrapped in the overall matrix.

EXAMPLE 6

Silica particles (1 g) are heated in a drying oven for one hour and then stirred with 150 mL of an aqueous solution (60 mM) of zirconyl chloride with the silica (1 g) at 60° C. for two days. The solid is isolated by filtration or centrifugation, washed three times with 150 mL of deionized water, and treated with 150 mL of a 20 mM solution of the 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium for six hours at 65° C. with agitation. The solid is separated from the aqueous solution and washed three times with deionized water.

The solid then is treated with 150 mL of a 20 mM solution of potassium platinum hexachloride for three hours at room temperature, thereby exchanging one platinum hexachloride anion for two chloride anions.

One hundred and fifty milliliters of a 60 mM solution of zirconyl chloride are added to the solid and the slurry agitated for three hours at room temperature and washed three times with deionized water.

The foregoing steps are repeated four times to produce a pentalaminar composition containing platinum cations. Treatment of an aqueous slurry of the platinized materials with hydrogen then converts the platinum ions into colloidal zero valence platinum metal.

EXAMPLE 7

Zirconyl chloride octahydrate (1.444 g, 4.8 mmol.) is dissolved in 50 mLs water and 50% hydrofluoric acid (0.756 g, 19 mmol) are added. To this is added a solution of 1 g of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dichloride (2.2 mmol) and 0.516 g of 85% phosphoric acid (4.5 mmol.) in 50 mLs of water. The reaction is refluxed for seven days and the white crystalline product is filtered and washed with water, methanol, and acetone and air-dried to yield the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).(O₃POH)

X-Ray diffraction analysis shows d=14 Å. Infra red analysis is as follows: (IR (cm−1), 3126, 3056, 1633, 1562, 1499, 1450, 1217, 1055, 816, 738, 647, 612, 520, 471). ³¹P NMR (ppm) are: 3.0, −18.6, −24.5.

EXAMPLE 8

Zirconyl chloride octahydrate (0.21 g, 0.7 mmol.) is dissolved in 10 mLs water and 50% hydrofluoric acid (0.11 g, 2.8 mmol) are added. To this is added a solution of 0.15 g of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dichloride (0.35 mmol) and 0.0686 g of 85% phosphoric acid (0.6 mmol.) in 10 mLs of water. The solution is placed in a 45 mL teflon bomb and the total volume adjusted to 27 mLs. The bomb is sealed and heated at 150° C. for six days to yield the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).(O₃POH)

X-Ray diffraction analysis shows d=14 Å. Infra red and ³¹P NMR (ppm) are identical to those given in Example 7.

EXAMPLE 9

Zirconyl chloride octahydrate (0.36 g, 1.12 mmol.) is dissolved in 10 mLs water and 50% hydrofluoric acid (0.179 g, 4.5 mmol) are added. To this is added a solution of 0.25 g of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-4,4′-bipyridinium dichloride (0.56 mmol) and 0.129 g of 85% phosphoric acid (0.11 mmol.) in 50 mLs of 3N hydrochloric acid. The reaction is refluxed for seven days and the white crystalline product is filtered and washed with water, methanol, and acetone and air-dried to yield the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).(O₃POH)

X-Ray diffraction analysis shows d=18.5 Å. Infra red and ³¹P NMR (ppm) are identical to those given in Example 7.

EXAMPLE 10

Zirconyl chloride (octahydrate) (0.361 g, 1.12 mmol.) is dissolved in 10 mLs water and 0.189 g of 50% hydrofluoric acid (4.8 mmol.) is added. 1,1′-Bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride (0.25 g, 0.56 mmol.) and phosphorous acid (0.092 g, 1.12 mmol.) are dissolved in 10 mLs of water and this solution is added to the aqueous zirconium solution. The reaction is refluxed for seven days and the white crystalline product is filtered, washed with water, methanol, and acetone and air-dried to yield the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).HPO₃

X-Ray diffraction analysis shows d=18.4 Å. Infra red analysis is as follows: 3126, 3056, 2436, 2358, 2330, 1633, 1555, 1499, 1443, 1386, 1210, 1161, 1048, 830, 731, 548. ³¹P NMR (ppm) are: 5.5, −9.5.

EXAMPLE 11

By following the procedure of Example 10 but utilizing 0.167 (0.38 mmol.) of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride and 0.123 g (1.5 mmol.) of phosphorous acid, there is obtained the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.34).(HPO₃)_(1.32)

The material is amorphous. Infra red and ³¹P NMR (ppm) are identical to those given in Example 10.

EXAMPLE 12

By following the procedure of Example 10 but utilizing 0.125 (0.28 mmol.) of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride and 0.138 g (1.68 mmol.) of phosphorous acid, there is obtained the mixed complex:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.25).(HPO₃)_(1.50)

The material is amorphous. Infra red and ³¹P NMR (ppm) are identical to those given in Example 10.

EXAMPLE 13

Zirconyl chloride (octahydrate) (0.151 g, 0.47 mmol.) is dissolved in 10 mLs water and 50% hydrofluoric acid (0.079 g, 1.9 mmol.) is added. 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride (0.105 g, 0.24 mmol.) and methyl phosphonic acid (0.045 g, 0.47 mmol.) are dissolved in 10 mLs of water and this solution is added to the aqueous zirconium solution. The reaction is refluxed for seven days and the white crystalline product is filtered, washed with water, methanol, and acetone, and air-dried to yield the mixed complex:

 Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).(CH₃PO₃)_(1.0)

The material is amorphous. Infra red analysis is as follows: (IR (cm−1), 3450, 3133, 3056, 2922, 1633, 1555, 1499, 1450, 1309, 1168, 1027, 823, 781, 527).

EXAMPLE 14

In a similar fashion to that described in Example 8, 0.93 mmol. of zirconyl chloride, 0.34 mmol. of 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride, and 0.90 mmoles of 3-aminoethylphosphonic acid are heated in a bomb at 150° C. Upon isolation as therein described the amorphous mixed complex exhibits the following IR spectra: (IR (cm−1), 3500, 3126, 3055, 1646, 1548, 1499, 1443, 1379, 1154, 1041, 865, 823, 760, 731, 541, 499.

EXAMPLE 15

In a similar fashion to that described in either Example 7 or Example 8, zirconyl chloride, 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride, and a phosphorus-containing co-ligand as shown in the following table are allowed to react.

Co-ligand BPBP* ZrOCl₂ Reagent mmols. mmols. mmols. Conditions CH₃PO(OH)₂ 0.47 0.23 0.47 Ex. 8: 150° C. CH₃CH₂PO(OH)₂ 1.12 0.56 1.12 Ex. 7 CH₃CH₂CH₂PO(OH)₂ 0.94 0.47 0.94 Ex. 8: 200° C. CH₃CH₂CH₂PO(OH)₂ 0.83 0.41 0.80 Ex. 8: 140° C. HOCOCH₂CH₂PO(OH)₂ 0.30 0.19 0.15 Ex. 8: 110° C. PhenylPO(OH)₂ 1.12 0.56 1.12 Ex. 7 ClCH₂PO(OCH₂CH₃)₂ 1.12 0.56 1.12 Ex. 7 BenzylPO(OCH₂CH₃)₂ 0.70 0.33 0.65 Ex. 7 *BPBP = 1,1′-bisphosphonoethyl-bipyridinium dichloride

Thereby produced are mixed complexes of the formula:

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5).R³PO₃

Data on these products are as follows:

R³ X-ray IR Data —CH₃ * See Ex. 13 —CH₂CH₃ d = 10.9Å* Spectra I —CH₂CH₂CH₃ d = 11.8Å* Spectra II —CH₂CH₂CH₃ d = 13.6Å* Spectra II —CH₂CH₂COOH d = 15.4Å Spectra III -phenyl d = 19.7Å* Spectra IV —CH₂Cl d = 11Å* Spectra V -benzyl d = 14.5Å Spectra VI * = Peaks present which are attributable to pure metal bisphosphonate. Spectra I: (IR(cm-1), 3507, 3126, 3056, 2978, 2943, 2887, 1640, 1563, 1506, 1450, 1393, 1281, 1168, 1048, 872, 830, 738, 541. Spectra II: (IR (cm-1), 3500, 3126, 3049, 2950, 2866, 1633, 1555, 1499, 1450, 1393, 1246, 1041, 872, 823, 795, 731, 541. Spectra III: (IR (cm-1), 3500, 2915, 1717, 1633, 1415, 1260, 1027, 816, 752, 534. Spectra IV: (IR (cm-1), 3500, 3126, 3049, 1633, 1555, 1499, 1443, 1386, 1161, 1055, 865, 823, 749, 731, 710, 541. Spectra V: (IR (cm-1), 3500, 3119, 3049, 1633, 1555, 1499, 1443, 1386, 1161, 1055, 865, 823, 759, 731, 710, 541. Spectra VI: (IR (cm-1), 3500, 3126, 3056, 1633, 1598, 1492, 1450, 1386, 1253, 1161, 1034, 830, 781, 738, 696, 626, 541, 499.

EXAMPLE 16

Zr(O₃PCH₂CH₂-bipyridinium-CH₂CH₂PO₃(Cl⁻)₂)_(0.5)(O₃POH) The complex prepared as in Example 7 (0.05 g) is stirred with 10 mLs of a 10 mM aqueous solution of dipotassium platinum tetrachloride at room temperature for two days. Over the course of the reaction, the solid changes from white to yellow. The solid then is isolated by filtration, washed extensively with deionized water, and air dried. The solid is suspended in deionized water and hydrogen gas bubbled through the mixture for ten hours. The solid changes from yellow to dark purple. The solid is isolated by filtration, washed with deionized water, and air dried to give a brown solid.

EXAMPLE 17

A substrate of gold deposited on a chromium metal film in turn deposited on glass is treated first with 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane and then phosphoryl chloride as previously described and then subjected to the procedure of Example 2 three times to prepare a composition of Formula III in which k is 3.

This composition shows a reversible reduction wave at −0.74 V versus a saturated calomel electrode. In water, it shows an irreversible reduction below −1.4 V versus the same standard electrode.

EXAMPLE 18

Twenty-five milligrams of a composition prepared as set forth in Example 6 in 5 mL of 0.1 M disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid as a sacrificial reductant in 1 cm² cell is irradiated with a 200 Watt Hg/Xe lamp. Levels of hydrogen are measured by gas chromatography. The rate of hydrogen production over 18 hours of photolysis is 0.07 mL/hr. Passing the light through a 330 nm cutoff filter (G>330 nm) decreases the rate of hydrogen production by more than an order of magnitude. If the filter is removed the sample photogenerates hydrogen as before. The quantum yield for hydrogen formation (2×moles of H₂/moles of photons incident with G<330 nm) in this system is 0.008.

One preferred class of compositions of the second embodiment consists of colloidal particles of Pt and Pd in a porous viologen metal phosphonate matrix (see FIG. 5). These materials are very different from other Pt+Pd catalysts; the viologen groups make a significant difference in the chemistry involved. The oxygen reduction is carried out by reduced viologen, and not (as is the case in the materials of the duPont patent) at the colloid surface, since the rate of reduction of oxygen by reduced viologen is much greater than by the colloidal metal particles. By the nature of the way that the solids are prepared, chloride or bromide “promoters” are unavoidably incorporated. A wide range of different materials were tested. A highly active compound contains a mixture of bisphosphonic acid and phosphate (i.e. Me(O₃P—OH)₁(O₃P—Z—PO₃)_(0.5).nH₂O .Pt/Pd). Compounds with the phosphate co-ligand where R³ is OH were found to be between 10 and 100 times more active than compounds where R³ was H, CH₃, CH₂Cl, CH₂CH₃, or CH₂CH₂CH₃. A wide range of different ratios of Pd:Pt were also tested. The catalysts have been examined to determine their uniformity and composition. Samples were dissolved in HF and the resulting solutions analyzed by ICP to get the total metal compositions (% by weight of Zr, Pt and Pd, see Table 1). Single particles were analyzed by electron microprobe and found them to have a uniform Zr:Pt:Pd ratio throughout the particles.

A wide range of different electron accepting groups can be associated into this structure that would be amenable to reduction by hydrogen (via colloidal metal particles) and subsequent use as a catalyst for formation of hydrogen peroxide and other reduced species.

The following are results of side-by-side comparisons of the novel catalysts of this invention with other Pt+Pd catalysts which were conducted under identical conditions. (See Table 1.) The amount of noble metal (Pt+Pd) in both the materials of this invention and the other materials were analyzed, and then those analyses were used to scale the amount of catalyst in the experiments to have the same amount of noble metal in each case. The comparisons were performed with mixtures of hydrogen and oxygen at atmospheric pressure. At increased pressures the concentration of hydrogen peroxide at steady state (rates of equations 1 and 2 above are identical so that the concentration of H₂O₂ is constant over time) will increase.

TABLE 1 Compound of Ex. 24 (below)† Other Catalyst‡ wt % Pt [i.e., Pt/(Pt + Pd)] 0.1 0.05-0.16 [H₂O₂] at steady state (M) 0.14* 0.07 (at atmospheric pressure) Initial turnover # (hr⁻¹) 30 * Actually 0.22M: In this procedure the solution is brought back up to 10 mL before an aliquot is taken, to compensate for evaporation. The steady state concentration of peroxide (rate of reaction 1 = rate of reaction 2) should be constant, regardless of the volume of the sample. Thus when the sample is diluted the amount of peroxide measured is lower. If # the conditions of the reaction are same, giving 0.14M peroxide, but the reaction mixture is not brought to 10 mL before removing the aliquot the measured concentration is 0.22M. Thus the steady state concentration of peroxide was underestimated by roughly 50%. †Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl.Pt.Pd-093 ‡The best catalyst disclosed in the duPont patent (U.S. Pat. No. 4,832,938

A number of different materials according to the present invention, both porous bulk solids and thin films grown on high surface area supports, were prepared and studied.

The bulk solids are prepared by first preparing the layered porous solid of Formula XV; then the halide ions are ion exchanged for polyhalometal anions (such as PtCl₄ ²⁻); and, then the polyhalometal ions are reduced with hydrogen to give a porous solid with impregnated metal particles.

In carrying out the ion exchange reaction it was found that elevated temperatures are needed. At room temperature PtCl₄ ²⁻ is taken up preferentially over PdCl₄ ²⁻, leading to a solid that is richer in Pt than the solution it was prepared from. If the ion exchange is carried out at elevated temperatures the exchange is uniform and the composition in the solid matches that of the solution exactly.

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl for the following examples was prepared as in Examples 7, 8, and 9 above. Various ratios of platinum and palladium were then incorporated as follows:

EXAMPLE 19

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-58:

170 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl was mixed with 4.6 ml of PdCl₂(7.3×10⁻³M) and 2.8 ml of K₂PtCl₄(6.1×10−³M). This mixture was heated to 60° C. with constant stirring for 1 hr. The yellow powder was filtered and washed three to four times with water. The yellow solid was suspended in water and hydrogen gas was bubbled for ½ hr at 60° C. The gray/black solid was filtered and washed first with water and then with ethanol. This solid was then air dried. 0.0072 g of the above solid was dissolved in conc. HCl, a few drops of conc. HNO₃, and a few drops of 59% HF. the solution was diluted to 100 ml. and analyzed for Zr, Pt, and Pd by ICP. The analysis (ppm) of the solution are Zr=14.05;Pt=1.01;Pd=0.73

EXAMPLE 20

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-32:

260 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl and 3 ml solution of 0.11M K₂PdCl₄ and 6.4×10⁻³M K₂PtCl₄ was heated to 60° C. for 30 minutes with constant stirring. The yellow solid so obtained was filtered and washed several times with water. This solid was resuspended in water and treated with H₂ gas as mentioned in the first synthesis. 0.0136 g of the dried solid was dissolved and analyzed as before, values in ppm: Zr=24.72;Pt=0.69;Pd=1.5

EXAMPLE 21

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-00:

200 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl was treated with 1 ml of 0.11 M K₂PdCl₄ and 0.18 ml of 1.6×10⁻³M K₂PtCl₄ and hydrogenated as mentioned in the previous example. )0.0117 g of the final black solid was dissolved in conc. HCl, a few drops of conc. HNO3, and a few drops of 50% HF. This solution was diluted to 25 ml. The analysis of the solution is as follows: Zr(ppm)=48.92;Pt=not detected; Pd(ppm)=6.75.

EXAMPLE 22

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-30:

200 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl, 1 ml of 4.8×10⁻²M K₂PdCl₄, and 0.275 ml of 4.7×10⁻²M K₂PtCl₄ was stirred at 60° C. for 20 min. The yellow solid so obtained was filtered, washed with water, and hydrogenated as before. 0.0125 g of the solid was dissolved as before and diluted to 25 ml for analysis to give Zr=49.91 ppm, Pt=2.15 ppm, Pd=4.92 ppm

EXAMPLE 23

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘PD-11:

500 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl was refluxed for 6 hrs. with 15 ml of 7.4×10⁻³M PdCl₂ and 0.99 ml of 5.1×10−³M K₂PtCl₄. The solid was filtered, washed and as before. The hydrogenation of the solid was carried as before except for 1 hr. 0.0172 g of this solid was dissolved as before and diluted to 25 ml for analysis to give Zr=70.29 ppm;Pt=1.18 ppm;Pd=9.10 ppm

EXAMPLE 24

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-093:

500 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl, 15 ml of 7.4×10⁻³M PdCl₂ and 0.99 ml of 5.1×10⁻³MK₂PtCl₄ was refluxed for 65 hrs. Filtered, washed, and hydrogenated as mentioned in the previous example. 0.018 g of the solid was dissolved as before and diluted to 25 ml for analysis to give Zr=127.98 ppm; Pt=0.78 ppm; Pd=7.72 ppm.

EXAMPLE 25

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt:

200 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl was treated with 2 ml of 5.1×10³¹ ³M solution of K₂PtCl₄ at 60° C. for 1 hr. The solid was filtered, washed, and hydrogenated as mentioned in the previous example. 0.0162 g of the solid was used to prepare a 25 ml solution for the analysis to give Zr=117.9 ppm;Pt=20.01 ppm

EXAMPLE 26

Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pd:

100 mg of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl and 1 ml of 6.3×10⁻²M PdCl₂ was treated at 60° C. for 4 hrs. The orange solid was filtered, washed, and hydrogenated as before.0.0131 g of the solid was dissolved in 25 ml as mentioned above for analysis to give Zr=92.96 ppm;Pd=8.54 ppm

The materials are grown on high surface area supports in a multi step process, as described below. Ion exchange can be carried out either as the film is growing or after it is prepared.

EXAMPLE 27

Synthesis of SiO₂∘Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘:

One gram of silica gel (Selecto,Inc. Cat#162544, lot#216073) was heated at 200° C. for 1 hr. This was treated with 150 ml of 65 mM ZrOCl₂ at 60° C. for two days. This was followed by a treatment with 150 ml solution, which consists of 20 mM (O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl, 20 mM phosphoric acid, and 60 mM NaCl at 60° C. for 18 hours. These treatments were repeated four times. At the end the pale yellow solid was washed with water and dried.

EXAMPLE 28

SiO₂∘Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl∘Pt∘Pd-21:

270 mg of SiO₂∘Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl was treated with 3 ml solution, which was 0.12M in K₂PdCl₄ and 6.4×10−M in K₂PtCl₄ at 60° C. for one hour. Filtered and washed. The solid was hydrogenated as mentioned above. 0.0494 g of this solid was dissolved and in HCl, HNO₃, and 50 HF and diluted to 25 ml. Analyses: Zr=166.8 ppm, Pt=2.97 ppm, Pd=10.89 ppm.

EXAMPLES 29

Samples were prepared as described above in the synthesis of each compound in Examples 19-28. The metal content of these solutions were determined by ICP. The weight percent of viologen was estimated from the Zr value, assuming there are 2 Zr atoms per viologen molecule in the solid. The viologen unit was taken to be C₁₀H₈N₂.

EXAMPLE 30

Hydrogen Peroxide Formation

An amount of each of the catalysts was placed in a 50 ml plastic tube. 10 ml of 0.15 mM solution of acetanilide in 0.1 M HCl was added to each tube, and it was sealed with a rubber septum. A mixture of oxygen and hydrogen was bubbled through the suspension. In some cases air was used rather than O₂. At sequential time intervals, starting at 1 hour (up to about 28 hours) the loss of solution volume due to evaporation was made up by the addition of 0.15 mM solution of acetanilide in 0.1 M HCl and an amount of reaction mixture was withdrawn and diluted to 5 ml with titanium sulfate solution previously prepared in sulfuric acid. The absorbance of the solutions was recorded at 410 nm. The colorimetric assays have been checked by titration of the same solutions with KMnO₄ and shown to be very accurate. Table 2 shows the elemental analyses of compounds synthesized and/or used. The data shows the catalytic properties of the compounds in the production of hydrogen peroxide at various stages and under various conditions including different ratios of Pt to Pd and at a number of pHs.

The above examples all involved atmospheric pressure reactions. Two parameters are important in this regard, those are the initial rate of hydrogen peroxide formation and the steady state concentration of hydrogen peroxide. The steady state concentration indicates the concentration at which the system is making water from peroxide at the same rate that peroxide is being formed, while the initial rate is an indication of the rate of hydrogen peroxide formation. The best steady state value observed was 140 mM. At steady state the rate of oxygen reduction (equation 3) and hydrogen peroxide reduction (equation 4) are equal, so that the concentration of hydrogen peroxide is constant. The initial rate of the reaction in these experiments is 30 turnovers per hour (based on the moles of viologen present in the system). These experiments were carried out with a catalyst which has an R of 0.093 and a mixture of 1:5 of H₂:O₂. A commercial catalyst (see U.S. Pat. No. 4,832,938 to duPont, Table 1A prep. D) treated in an identical manner produced only 70 mM hydrogen peroxide at steady state. As the mixture of H₂ and O₂ is made richer in oxygen (i.e. H₂:O₂=1:10) the amount of hydrogen peroxide produced decreases.

Other catalysts loose a good fraction of their activity very quickly. Tests of the catalysts above showed a level of activity much higher than that observed for the duPont catalyst (U.S. Pat. No. 4,832,938 to duPont, Table 1A prep. D) under identical conditions.

EXAMPLE 31

High Pressure Hydrogen Peroxide Formation

A number of experiments were performed with various combinations of gas pressures (H₂, O₂, N₂) in a 70 ml pressure vessel. Five mls of 0.1 M HCl and 25 milligrams of Zr(O₃POH)(O₃PCH₂CH₂bipyridiniumCH₂CH₂PO₃)Cl*Pt*Pd-14 were added to the vessel. A mixture of oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen at the prescribed pressures was added to the vessel. The reactions were allowed to proceed for various times. The H₂O₂ concentrations are similar to those obtained in experiments at atmospheric pressure (see above). The data shows that an increase in either reactor vessel volume or an increase in pressure would yield higher H₂O₂ concentrations, i.e., if P_(H2) and P_(O2) were increased by a factor of 5 the results would be one molar H₂O₂.

EXAMPLE 32

Synthesis of phosphonate derivatized Polymer template

Diethyl-4-bromobutylphosphonate was made by the Michealis-Arbuzov Rearrangement of Br(CH₂)₄Br with triethyl phosphite. 1,4-dibromobutane (21.5 g, 100 mmol ) and triethylphosphite (6.65 g, 40 mmol) were heated to 150° C. for 6 hours. Unreacted 1,4-dibromobutane was removed by vacuum distillation.

Poly(4-vinylpyridine) (PVP) was alkylated with diethyl 4-bromobutyl phosphonate to give polymers (PVP-C₄P). PVP (1 g, 9.5 mmol) was dissolved in 60 mL N, N-dimethyl formamide (DMF) with 1.48 g (5.4 mmol) of diethyl-4-bromobutylphosphonate. The mixture was stirred at 60° C. for two hours, and DMF was removed under vacuum. The remaining solid was washed with a 1:4 (v:v) mixture of methanol and diethyl ether, and then refluxed in ether for two hours. The solid sample was filtered and dried. The dried sample was then dissolved in 30 mL methylene chloride, 12 g of bromotrimethylsilane was added and the mixture was stirred for 6 hours under an Ar atmosphere. H₂O (80 mL) was added and the solution was stirred one more hour. The water phase was separated, and removed under vacuum to get yellow-brown solid (PVP—C₄P). CHN analysis of PVP—C₄P gave C: 55.76, H: 6.67, N: 8.20. This analysis is consistent with 25% of the pyridyl groups being alkylated. [C₇H₇N]₃[C₁₁H₁₇NO₃PBr]*3H₂O would give a CHN analysis of C: 55.57, H: 6.41, N:8.10. The NMR spectra of PVP—C₄P consists of relatively broad lines, due to the polymeric nature of the material. Three broad appear in the 1H NMR spectrum in d6-DMSO/D₂O at 8.2, 6.6 and 1.6 ppm, with integrated intensities of 1, 1, and 2.4. This ratio is consistent with the 25% derivitization if the two downfield peaks are assigned to pyridyl/pyridinium resonances and the peak at 1.6 ppm is assigned to all of the CH₂ groups except the one bound to nitrogen (based on model compounds the latter peak is expected to fall under HDO), since this should give a ratio of 1:1:2.3.

EXAMPLE 33

Platinum colloids were prepared via reduction of hexachloroplatinate solution by sodium citrate. The reduction was similar to that described by Brugger, et. al., except that the temperature was held at 90° C. in order to get uniform particle size (P. Brugger, P. Cuendet, M. Gatzel, J. Am. Chem. Soc., (1981), 103, page 2923.) K₂PtCl₆ (40 mg) was dissolved in 300 mL distilled water and the solution was heated to 90° C. An aqueous solution of sodium citrate (30 mL, 1% weight percent sodium citrate) was added and the solution stirred for 3 hours. After the colloid suspension was cooled to room temperature, Amberlite-MB-1 exchange resin was added and the mixture was stirred to remove the excess citrate until the conductivity of the solution was less an 5 m S/cm.

EXAMPLE 34

Growth of Zirconium Viologen-bisphosphonate (ZrVP) on PVP—C₄P

Polymer PVP—C₄P (5 mg) was dissolved in 50 mL of the Pt colloid suspension described above. The weight ratio of Pt: polymer is 1:2.5. After the mixture was shaken for one hour to reach equilibrium, 0.3 gm of ZrOCl₂.8H₂O was dissolved in the PVP—C₄P/Pt suspension. The mixture was shaken at room temperature overnight in order to complete the reaction of Zr⁴⁺ ions with phosphonate groups of the polymer. The mixture was then dialyzed against distilled water to remove free ions. The molecular weight cut of the dialysis tube used here was 12,000-15,000.

Dialysis was carried out until conductivity of the water was less than 5 mS/cm. The suspension was poured back to a flask, 0.04 g viologen bisphosphonic acid was added and the mixture was shaken at 60° C. overnight, a similar dialysis process was carried out to a conductivity of less than 5 mS/cm. The zirconium and bisphosphonate treatments were repeatedly performed up to five times in order to grow multiple layers of the ZrVP materials.

EXAMPLE 35

Photochemical Hydrogen Generation

Photochemical hydrogen generation was carried out by irradiating samples of the polymer templated ZrVP on Pt colloids (Example 34) in EDTA solutions. The suspension was held in a 1 cm square cell kept at 20° C. throughout the photochemical experiment. A mixture of 4 mL of the sample suspension and 1 mL of 0.1 M NaEDTA (sacrificial reducing agent) were thoroughly degassed by bubbling N₂ through the suspension prior to photolysis. The sample was then irradiated with a 200 Watt Hg/Xe arc lamp. Levels of hydrogen were measured by GC.

Photolysis of a suspension sample with 11 mg ZrPV(Cl) in 0.05 M NaEDTA by a 200-w Hg/Xe lamp leads to a hydrogen production rate 0.25 mL/hr for the first hour. EDTA is used as a sacrificial reductant to turn the system over. The rate of hydrogen production gradually decrease on longer irradiation time. This is similar to that on multi layer thin films grown on silica surface.

Passing the light through a 260 nm cutoff filter decreases the rate of hydrogen production by about 50%, but produces about 20% more hydrogen in longer period of time. The wave length dependence for photoproduction of hydrogen in this system correlates well with that observed in forming charge-separated state in both microcrystalline and thin film sample of ZrPV(Cl). To compare the production of H₂ from water between layered ZrPV(Cl) with polysoap template and the amorphous sample.

EXAMPLE 36

Sample and Substrate Preparation

Polymer PVP—C₄P (molecular weight=100,000) was synthesized from poly(4-vinylpyridine) and diethyl,4-bromobutyl-phosphonate by the method described in Example 32. H₂O₃PCH₂CH₂(bipyridinium)CH₂CH₂PO₃H₂Cl₂ (V2P) was prepared as described in Example 1. Single-crystal polished silicon wafers and microscopic fused silica (quartz) slides (˜1×3 cm²) and 0.05-0.1 mm thick gold, platinum and palladium foil (˜1×0.5 cm²) were each used as substrates. They were cleaned before use with a mixture of concentrated H₂SO₄ and 30% H₂O₂ (v/v 3:1), rinsed thoroughly with distilled water and heated at 500° C. overnight to provide a dehydroxylated surface.

Surface Initialization Procedure

A silicon wafer, quartz slide or metal foil strip was dipped into an aqueous 0.5% (w/w) solution of PVP—C₄P. After 5 minutes, the slide was removed from the solution and dried by blowing pure N₂. A thin layer of 80 mM solution of ZrOCl₂ was applied to the surface of the slide to achieve the cross-linking of phosphonic acid residues of polymer, and the film was air-dried. To make sure that the polymer was fully cross-linked with Zr⁴⁺ ions, the process was repeated twice. The slide was then washed with distilled water to remove extra ions from surface.

Film Growth

Multilayers of ZrPV(Cl) compound were produced on the zirconium rich surfaces by repeated dipping of the initialized substrate in 10 mM V2P aqueous solution at 80° C. for 4 hours (step 1), then in 60 mM ZrOCl₂ aqueous solution at room temperature for 2 hours (step 2). The surface was thoroughly rinsed with distilled water between dippings (step 3). Steps 1-3 constituted one cycle of treatment. Various films were made by repeating up to 15 cycles. In the last cycle step 2 was usually omitted.

EXAMPLE 37

Atomic force microscopic (AFM) images were obtained with NanoScope III Scanning Probe Microscope (Digital Instruments). Surface was imaged in a tapping mode with silicon cantilevers (typical F_(o)320-360 kHz). AFM images (0.5×0.5 μm2) of the samples reveal their finer features and demonstrate that the structure and thickness of the films prepared in the same way depends on the nature of the substrate. All of the samples showed a significant increase in RMS roughness on film growth.

Examination of the AFM images shows that in all case the materials growing on the surface consist of microcrystallites. It is in contrast to the growth of Zn and Cu alkanebisphosphonate mutlilayer films (Yang, H. C., K. Aoki, H.-G. Hong, D. D. Sackett, M. F. Arendt, S.-L. Yau, C. M. Bell, T. E. Mallouk J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1993, 115, 11855-11862.) which results in the smoothing of surface roughness. The crystals are smaller in the case of quartz and silicon substrates and larger in the case of metals. There seems to be no direct correlation between the overall roughness of the film and the crystal size, as well as between the roughness of the bare substrate and of the film at it (Table 3). The films on quartz consist of small crystals uniformly distributed on the surface. Films on gold and platinum are made up of somewhat larger crystals that those on quartz, but they are still uniformly distributed on gold and tend to aggregate into larger clusters on platinum. Growth of films on Pd leads to large crystals, which appear clustered into even larger islands. In contrast, films on silicon consist of very small particles, which also cluster into large islands. No differences were observed in the AFM images of untreated and PVP—C₄P treated substrates.

EXAMPLE 38

Cyclic voltammograms (CV) were registered at Au, Pt and Pd electrodes (working surface area ˜0.3 cm²) covered with ZrPV(Cl) films as described above in Examples 36-37. PAR Potentiostat/Galvanostst Model 283 was used. A counter electrode (Pt wire) was separated from the working aqueous 0.1 M KCl solution by a porous glass frit. The reference was a saturated calomel electrode (SCE). Oxygen was removed from the working solution by bubbling with argon gas of high purity.

Cyclic voltammograms of the ZrPV(Cl) films at the Au, Pt and Pd electrodes show broad peaks with reduction potentials (E_(surf) ^(o)=(E_(p,c)+E_(p,a))/2 where E_(p,c) and E_(p,a) are the cathodic and anodic peak potentials, respectively) close to −0.77 V, with peak-to-peak separations (ΔE) of 120-200 mV. ΔE is slightly affected by the number of treatments on gold and platinum but shows no change for palladium. This large ΔE increasing as the experimental time scale is shortened (at higher potential scan rates; not shown) indicate the kinetic limitations for charge transfer which are more serious for anodic processes and for Pt and Pd electrodes.

Integration of the reduction peaks at the cyclic voltammograms confirm that the amount of ZrPV(Cl) accumulated at the surface after the same number of treatments is different for different substrates. Much more material is being accumulated at Pt and Pd than at Au. These results are consistent with the AFM data indicating that films at Pt and Pd are more rough than at Au. Estimates based on the integrals obtained from the cyclic voltammograms indicate that every cycle of treatment results not in a single layer coating but adds 3-6 layers depending on substrate.

The E^(o) _(surf) values are 100 mV more negative than E^(o) for the one-electron reduction of V2P in aqueous solution which we found to be −0.67 V (ΔE=70 mV), which is close to the redox potential reported for the methylviologen dication/cation radical redox couple (−0.69 V). The 100 mV shift of E^(o) _(surf) to the more negative values in films as compared to V2P in solution is not significantly affected by the number of times the substrate is treated with the Zr⁴⁺ and viologen bisphosphonate.

EXAMPLE 39

Blue color due to photochemical charge separation is observed on the layered ZrPV(Cl) with polysoap template, if the sample is photolyzed with a 200 w Hg/Xe lamp in vacuum or under N₂. Five minute photolysis leads to the formation of both reduced viologen monomer and dimmer on the irradiated sample. Electron spectra show the decreasing band of 270 nm, and appearance of bands at 405, 605 nm and 380, 540 nm, which are correspond to monomer and dimmer respectively. The electronic spectra of the ZrPV(Cl) with polysoap template, as well as the air sensitivity of the photoreduced sample suggest that this multilayered compound is not as tightly packed as microcrystalline samples of ZrPV(Cl). ** Treating of a photoreduced suspension sample of layered ZrPV(Cl) with template with air leads to complete bleaching within a matter of seconds, while the microcrystalline samples require hours to days. Oxygen appears to freely diffuse through the more open lattice of the compound. This is probably related to the flexible blanket-like feature of the materials with template. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A derivatized polymer characterized by the repeating unit having the formula:

wherein: P is Phosphorous or Arsenic; and, n is 0 to
 10. 